1 / 15

Low atmospheric reconnections associated with an eruptive flare

Low atmospheric reconnections associated with an eruptive flare. Yong-Jae Moon(1), Jongchul Chae(2), Young-Deuk Park(1) 1: Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute 2: Seoul National University. Outline.

peony
Download Presentation

Low atmospheric reconnections associated with an eruptive flare

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Low atmospheric reconnections associated with an eruptive flare Yong-Jae Moon(1), Jongchul Chae(2), Young-Deuk Park(1) 1: Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute 2: Seoul National University KASI

  2. Outline We present anobservational study of the filament-flare-CME event on Nov. 24, 2000 with the following topics: 1. Preflare Activity 2. Preflare Activity and Canceling Magnetic Feature (CMF) 3. Pre-flare Activity and Filament Eruption 4. Filament Kinematics and CME KASI

  3. Advantages of Present Study • Near simultaneous observation of MDI, TRACE 1600, BBSO H-alpha centerline and bluewing : 1-min time cadence and 1’’ spatial resolution • Initial filament kinematics is well examined (10-160km/s for the first twenty minutes) • We study the relationship among preflare brightenings, canceling magnetic features, and initial filament kinematics KASI

  4. Preflare Activity SOHO/MDI H-a center H-a blue TRACE 1600 KASI

  5. SOHO/MDI • Two brightenings (B1 and B2) are just near one footpoint of the filament and cospatial with two CMFs H-a center TRACE 1600 KASI

  6. Small-scale Eruptive Events • Recurrent small-scale UV eruptive events near the one footpoint of the filament near the eruption time. 1) Projected speed : 140 km/s 2) It may be a result of low atmosphere reconnection. TRACE 1600 KASI

  7. TRACE EUV loop eruption Sturruck et al. (2001) KASI

  8. 2.Canceling Magnetic Features • Sonic filter : 4km/s • Flux variations of two CMFs 1) A tendency : first increase and then decrease : imply “ First emergence and then reconnection” 2) Brightenings (B1,B2) occurred in the flux decrease phase KASI

  9. 3. Preflare Activity and Eruption • From BBSO H-alpha data, we derived ejection speeds • Eruption started at 21:30 UT with 10km/s, which is 10-20 minutes earlier than the flare onset • Pre-flare brightening (near 21:32 UT) is coincident with the eruption time. KASI

  10. 4. Filament Kinematics and CME • The maximum acceleration occurs near the peak time of the the flare. • Initial exponential growth : may be explained by flux injection (Chen) or mass drainage (Low) instabilities(Forbes) KASI

  11. EIT Running Difference Image • A direction of the EIT wave feature seen in the last image : consistent with the direction of a LASCO CME seen at 22:06 KASI

  12. LASCO Running Difference Image KASI

  13. Summary • There are noticeable preflare brightenings which are located near one footpoint of the filament. • They are most evident in Trace UV and H-alpha images and are cospatial with CMFs. • The CMFs show a tendency of “flux increase and then decrease” and they seem to be triggered by flux emergence and/or motions. • Preflare activity, CMFs, and UV eruptive events may imply low-atmosphere reconnections. • One major pre-flare brightening responsible for the flare precursor is coincident with the eruption time. • The above activities may play important role in the onset of the filament eruption. KASI

  14. Future Works • From a statistical study of filament-flare-CME events, we will address several questions: 1. What is preflare activity ? 2. Is CMF responsible for flare precursor ? 3. Is statistically significant CMF frequencynear eruption time ? 4. Is there any difference between eruptive and non-eruptive events ? 5. What is the relationship among preflare activity, CMFs, flare precursor, and filament eruption ? 6. What is the implication on the CME onset time ? Solar-B and SDO may give more definite answers. KASI

  15. 19:46 1999 Jan 16 M1.2 Foot point Brightening Sigmoid and eruption Yohkoh Soft X-ray TRACE 1600 Å

More Related